I have a 1979 13" Scamp. I'm changing out the front sofa/bunks into a dinette.

Can I mount a small drop leaf table to the front wall of the Scamp? Is the fiberglass going to support the weight of the table?

The one I'm looking at is from Ikea. It mounts on the wall and lies flat (Not literally. It actually comes out about three inches.) against the wall when not in use. When in use, it swings up and is supported by a swing out brace.

If it will be ok to mount it there, should I use rivets, screws or glue, or a combination?

The rear scamp table has a piece of plywood glassed into the wall for support. For the front of a Scamp I would attach a support wall to the upper floor ledge and run it up and attach it to the upper goucho wall support. The glass shell is flimsy and you don't have any holes in the shell since everything will be attached inside. You can also end up with a fairly vertical attaching surface.
Eddie
I had thought of adapting a table like the attached would be neat for a front dinette mod.http://www.campingworld.com/shopping...ll-table/69220

In most front dinette set ups the front table is used to bridge the space between the seats to make a single bed. For dinette use a pedestal is used. I made a base for mine rather than screwing into the floor.

I lost my table for a while but it's back. In an effort to replace it I bought the end pieces and tube [as shown in the last picture]. I also bought a complete table, used [but with serviceable hardware] that mounts with a piano hinge, slides open for an extra leaf and folds down when not in use.
I will be in the Santa Rosa Beach area in December. If any of this gear is of use to you, send me a PM.
I will fwd a picture later.
Scouter Dave.

__________________Embark upon this journey with enthusiasm and eagerness.If we were expected to remain in one place we would have been created with roots

I like your idea and I hadn't thought of setting it up as an additional bed. I would like something that drops down out of the way so I can use that center space for our portapotti when we don't need a table.

I like your idea and I hadn't thought of setting it up as an additional bed. I would like something that drops down out of the way so I can use that center space for our portapotti when we don't need a table.

Thanks,
tonnie

Take a yard stick and check the curvature of the front of your scamp. Both a hinge and a wall mount bracket require a strait surface.

Thanks to everyone for the suggestions. After looking at the one on the camping world site sent to me by Eddie, I've designed my own. Unless there is some design flaw I haven't thought of, it is essentially a 6" deep set of shelves which go to the floor in the lower area of the front section. It will span the entire width of the lower opening between the bench supports. I hope it can be screwed into the sides of those bench supports. The table will be hinged from the second shelf (leaving an open shelf for whatever (books!) and a ledge (top of bookshelf). The table will have a swing down pole to support it when it is open. When the table is not in use, it will obscure the front of the shelving unit except the top open shelf. When it is up and in use, the interior storage shelves can be seen and accessed.

Does anyone have a suggestion or see a problem with my design? I want the unit to be stabilized from the floor.

trying to get a little extra usable space out of a small space to begin with is a worthwhile and fun little "puzzle" to play with, ain't it?

I've worked on/with fold down/up tables in boats....and for the sake of giving you even more options (always a good thing) I offer the following:

I like the shelves on the vertical, stationary, part of your project....except for the top shelf, they will only be accessible when the table is up...and then not very easily. If it was me I would consider dropping the hinge part of the idea and replacing it with a pocket on the floor that would keep the bottom of the table in place while travelling in the down position....and the top would be held in place by a keeper of some sort, like a window latch of bungy....

this would involve lifting the table up and dropping onto dowels/keepers of some sort when you set it up...but it is a small table... The result would be that you could access the stuff on the lower shelves my merely opening the latch/bungy and tilting the table away from the vertical to grab something on the shelves behind it.

I know what you mean by wanting to use the space where the table is....I used my table to make a large bed at the rear of my trailer....happy with the results, by accident I found that I really enjoyed the new area where the table was when the bed was made up...so I devised a way of storing my table upright against the forward bulkhead even when the rear bed was not in use/set up...

I really like the extra space while travelling, working on the inside of the trailer and while loading/unloading it before/after a trip....

good luck with your project...look forward to seeing it when it's done....

Trillium has an interesting way of mounting the table on their front dinette. They put an interior piece of fibreglass that the table mounts to, so that there are no new holes in the fibreglass shell. The fibreglass mounts to the window frame.